After reading your post on NASA's high busyness back in 2004 I thought immediately there still might be an important need for improvement in terms of mutual respect over IP and Copyrights across sectors or industries with different/separate main interests; I believe I am being polite here. Best, Damien Y. Bizeau.

Am in a case which started in December 2003; in early 2004 I reported to NASA digital piracy via pseudonymous peer to peer file sharing and bootlegging acts. Being primarily a musician who has quite a few personal music creations works to his background I belong mainly to the artists' category who don't see how piracy could actually be good for the sake of the music industry: digital piracy of music is a growing issue causing constantly losses of revenues globally; let's not forget it. Since I didn't have any contract with the authorities in charge of investigating my anti digital piracy lead and because prosecution for my case did not happen because the piracy acts were impossible to verify technically, I think I possibly would have been better off just gambling at the casino for a living LOL.

On the web it goes without really further developing that digital pirates take strategic measures for them to avoid getting caught difficult to prove in any court; Eric F. Vermote is a good example for that because with his professional IT skills he easily got me wrongly convicted of French Press Defamation in July 2011 for a blog post I released mentioning peer to peer digital piracy he committed and bootlgegging acts of his during 2003-2004 in Maryland implicating his US Government employers NASA & UMD which never worried much about the matter despite the piracy case they were part of really occured but without a trace, "strangely"...(Eric F. Vermote actually entirely denied having ever performed digital piracy in any form in his French Press Defamation Direct Complaint against me in order to keep his jobs as a IT specialist who develops computer softwares for the US Government). Above all this the French authorities don't investigate foreign matters of this type. Another good example related to the international "unfair system" of cases like this one is that no official French word translates for "bootleg" in the French judicial or legal vocabularies...good luck to Ubisoft! I mean it.

Piracy kills music and movies-the MPAA needs support! Eric Vermote illegally used P2P in Maryland during 2003-2004 (bootlegs & audio files for his car). This man with a IT degree works for NASA & the University of Maryland but went to jail for automobile theft in Florida... he is definitely not at all scrupulous with music too obviously and filed a defamation legal suit in France against me in July 2009 stipulating he never got involved in on-line piracy because he is a manipulative liar & because the case involved never got officially substantiated or couldn't ever be substantiated; my point is that if the Internet had been better regulated by the US government Eric F. Vermote would not have had the opportunity to lie against me and pretend what I accused him of (on-line piracy) is frivolous. On-line piracy cases almost absolutely never get substantiated unfortunately! Damien Bizeau - Classical Music, France.